Explorer
Level 7 Veep
[TI37] Smile, make someone's day. Makes your day.
Posts: 956
Nationality: Canadian
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Post by Explorer on Feb 20, 2024 15:12:02 GMT
I agree.
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Joey
Service Department
Loyal member, member number 100, contest winner & super-poster
[TI38] Never do today what you can put off till tomorrow.
Posts: 14,144
Mini-Profile Background: {"image":"http://www.eurogarden.ro/images/galerie/galerie9/1873-flower_garden.jpg"}
Year of Birth: Before dirt
Nationality: Euro-American
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Post by Joey on Feb 21, 2024 7:22:48 GMT
Also time to get some laws in motion so this doesn't keep happening.
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Explorer
Level 7 Veep
[TI37] Smile, make someone's day. Makes your day.
Posts: 956
Nationality: Canadian
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Post by Explorer on Feb 22, 2024 2:17:51 GMT
I agree again.
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Joey
Service Department
Loyal member, member number 100, contest winner & super-poster
[TI38] Never do today what you can put off till tomorrow.
Posts: 14,144
Mini-Profile Background: {"image":"http://www.eurogarden.ro/images/galerie/galerie9/1873-flower_garden.jpg"}
Year of Birth: Before dirt
Nationality: Euro-American
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Post by Joey on Feb 23, 2024 8:38:40 GMT
Own Sperm Is Ordered to Pay Millions The doctor, Paul B. Jones, 83, was believed to have fathered at least 17 children with 12 women using artificial insemination from 1975 to 1997, one of the children said.
By Alyssa Lukpat April 28, 2022 A jury in Colorado awarded $8.75 million on Wednesday to the plaintiffs in a civil lawsuit who accused a former fertility doctor of using his own sperm to impregnate at least a dozen women via artificial insemination over more than two decades.
The judgment was awarded to Cheryl Emmons, her husband and two of her daughters, who their lawyer Patrick Fitz-Gerald said had been surreptitiously fathered by the doctor, Paul B. Jones.
The Emmonses and seven other families filed a lawsuit in October 2019 against Dr. Jones and the clinic where he worked, Women’s Health Care of Western Colorado, on claims of medical negligence, lack of informed consent, fraud, negligence misrepresentation, breach of contract, battery, and extreme and outrageous conduct, according to the lawsuit.
Five of the families settled for an undisclosed amount before the case went to trial, Mr. Fitz-Gerald said. Two other claims against Dr. Jones are still active.
Because the Emmonses filed more claims against Dr. Jones than against the clinic, he is expected to pay a vast majority of the $8.75 million award, Mr. Fitz-Gerald said.
Dr. Jones’s lawyers, Nicole Marie Black and Nancy L. Cohen, did not immediately respond Thursday to emails or phone calls seeking comment. But in 2019, around the time the lawsuit was filed, Dr. Jones refused to tell a reporter from KUSA in Denver whether he had fathered the children named in the lawsuit.
“I don’t deny it; I don’t admit it,” he said at the time.
He gave up his physician’s license in November 2019, days after the families filed the lawsuit, according to state records.
Ivan Sarkissian, a lawyer for Women’s Health Care of Western Colorado, where Dr. Jones worked, did not immediately return emails or calls on Thursday.
Dr. Jones, Ms. Emmons’s former obstetrician and gynecologist in Grand Junction, Colo., was believed to have fathered at least 17 children with 12 women from 1975 to 1997, Maia Emmons-Boring, one of Ms. Emmons’s daughters, said on Thursday.
In 1979 and 1984, Dr. Jones impregnated Ms. Emmons by artificial insemination after suggesting that he would find a doctor or medical student to be her sperm donor, Ms. Emmons-Boring said.
He never told the family that he was the one providing the sperm sample, Ms. Emmons-Boring said. Dr. Jones, now 83, even helped deliver both Ms. Emmons-Boring and her sister Tahnee Scott.
Ms. Emmons-Boring had never questioned that the man who raised her was not her father until a series of events that began after she took a DNA test from Ancestry.com.
In 2018, after Ms. Emmons-Boring took the test, she said she received a message from a woman who believed they were half-siblings. She did not believe the woman at first, but then she did some digging.
Her parents then told her for the first time that she and her sister had been conceived using artificial insemination. She spent weeks constructing a family tree “until it ran into Dr. Jones,” she said.
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